dopamine and yours
In a 2017 interview, Ev Williams (the founder of Twitter), said something that has stuck with me since: “the trouble with algorithms, is that it rewards extremes. Say you’re driving down the road and see a car crash. Of course you look. Everyone looks. The internet interprets behavior like this to mean everyone is asking for car crashes, so it trie... See more
sari azout • My Favorite Questions
Our dopamine economy, or what historian David Courtwright has called “limbic capitalism,” is driving this change, aided by transformational technology that has increased not just access but also drug numbers, variety, and potency.
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The number one determinant of dopamine release is novelty.
Andrew Huberman • How to Increase Motivation & Drive | Huberman Lab Podcast #12
What dopamine is “really doing,” Berridge says, “is taking things you encounter, little cues, things you smell and hear, and if they have a motivational significance, [it] can magnify that significance,” raising the incentive to pursue them. Placing dopamine directly into the nucleus accumbens of rats, he notes, will make them work two to three tim... See more
Maia Szalavitz • Dopamine: The Currency of Desire
Schultz suggests dopamine serves as a common currency system for desire.
Maia Szalavitz • Dopamine: The Currency of Desire
In this view, dopamine does not signify how pleasant an experience will be but how much value it has to the organism at that particular moment. Schultz notes that dopamine neurons do not distinguish among different types of reward. “They're only interested in the value,” he says. “They don't care whether it's food reward or liquid reward or money. ... See more
Maia Szalavitz • Dopamine: The Currency of Desire
In a series of experiments begun in the 1980s, Schultz and his colleagues showed that when monkeys first get something pleasant—in this case, fruit juice—their dopamine neurons fire most intensely when they drink the liquid. But once they learn that a cue like a light or a sound predicts the delivery of delicious stuff, the neurons fire when the cu... See more
Maia Szalavitz • Dopamine: The Currency of Desire
dopamine is a prediction machine
They labeled the drive that dopamine seemed to induce as “wanting” and called the joy of being satiated, which did not seem to be connected with dopamine, “liking.”
Maia Szalavitz • Dopamine: The Currency of Desire
“Often, depressed people say they don’t want to go out with their friends,” says Salamone. But it’s not that they don’t experience pleasure, he says – if their friends were around, many depressed people could have fun.
“Low levels of dopamine make people and other animals less likely to work for things, so it has more to do with motivation and cost/... See more
“Low levels of dopamine make people and other animals less likely to work for things, so it has more to do with motivation and cost/... See more
Christine Buckley • UConn Researcher: Dopamine Not About Pleasure (Anymore) - UConn Today
dopamine controls your effort of doing stuff which, in turn, might make you happy and feel pleasure (but it doesn’t directly control how much pleasure you feel)